Odds and Ends: Taking airplanes in on trade; Q400 scores
Taking airplanes in on trade: Much is being made of Boeing taking five Airbus A340-600s in on trade to secure an order for 20 777-300ERs from China Eastern. While trade-ins are not common, neither are they unknown. Boeing has done this before, including what was then a particularly controversial deal: taking brand-new A340s off the hands of Singapore Airlines even before they had been delivered as part of a 777 deal. Those A340-300s went straight to Boeing from Airbus, much to the consternation of John Leahy at the time.
The OEMs don’t like to take airplanes in on trade; after all, they are in the business of selling new airplanes, not used ones, but Airbus, Boeing and Bombardier all have active used airplane units to remarket aircraft they have in their own portfolios–usually originating from their customer financing.
Bombardier wins Q400 deal: WestJet of Canada will order 20 Q400s and option 25 more in what was a hotly contested deal between ATR and Bombardier. Although many believe this was a slam-dunk for Bombardier, the competition was intense; WestJet sent the parties back to re-price the deal late in the game.
This order gives BBD 28 firm and 45 options for the Q400 so far this year, compared with a mere seven in 2011.
The Russians Are Coming, the Russians Are Coming! Boeing imports Russian engineers to work in the Seattle area, much to the consternation of SPEAA, Boeing’s engineer’s union. Now the practice has caught the attention of a US Senator.
Outsourcing is a sore point for Boeing’s unions. While Boeing says it does so to reduce costs and to offset work in exchange for sales, there is a larger issue: the US simply doesn’t produce enough engineers to meet demand, and 50% of Boeing’s engineers reach retirement age in the next five years or so. We don’t like Boeing using Russian or Chinese help to produce airplanes–after all, these two countries are developing competitors to Boeing aircraft and it strikes us as pretty silly to help your competitor (why not hire French or German engineers, for Pete’s sake?). But the USA’s failure to place a high priority on developing engineers is a national disgrace and Boeing has to find the help where it can get it.
Leave a Reply Cancel reply
Twitter Updates
- @FG_STrim and that response is?? Wow (good)? Wow (bad)? Yuk? What? 1 day ago
- Comparing the 787, 777-200/300ER and the 777-8/9X dlvr.it/3Nh2Dd 2 days ago
- Comparing the 787, 777-200/300ER and the 777-8/9X wp.me/pcvQh-2jt 2 days ago
Leeham News and Comment
- Comparing the 787, 777-200/300ER and the 777-8/9X May 17, 2013
- Assessing the A350 program May 16, 2013
- Boeing gets launch order for MAX 7 May 15, 2013
- Taking care of business at the airframe OEMs May 15, 2013
- EADS earnings and Airbus A350, A380 updates May 14, 2013
Associations
Aviation News-Commercial
- Aerospace Industry News
- Air Courier News
- Air Transport Intelligence (subscription)
- Aviation Mainline News
- Aviation Now
- Aviation Press Releases
- Aviation Regional Airlines News
- Aviation Today
- Avitrader News Headlines
- Bill Virgin
- Boeing Frontiers
- Boeing-Focused News Site
- Flight Global
- Jet City Star Analyst Daily
- MSNBC Aviation
- Skycontrol News Headlines
- UBM Aviation Daily News
Aviation News-Defense
Commentaries
- AeroTurboPower
- AirInsight Blog
- AirInsight podcasts
- Aspire Aviation
- Aviation Week blogs
- Blog by Javier
- Boeing Defense blog
- Flying Lessons/Christine Negroni
- Holly Hegemann
- IAG Podcasts
- IAM 751 Blog
- Jon Ostrower
- Lexington Institute (Loren Thompson)
- Plane Talking
- Randy's Journal (Randy Tinseth of Boeing)
- Richard Aboulafia
- Steve Trimble
- Travel Insider
- Uresh Sheth
Companies-Commercial
Companies-Defense
Engines
Resources
TV News Partner
YouTube
Archives
- May 2013
- April 2013
- March 2013
- February 2013
- January 2013
- December 2012
- November 2012
- October 2012
- September 2012
- August 2012
- July 2012
- June 2012
- May 2012
- April 2012
- March 2012
- February 2012
- January 2012
- December 2011
- November 2011
- October 2011
- September 2011
- August 2011
- July 2011
- June 2011
- May 2011
- April 2011
- March 2011
- February 2011
- January 2011
- December 2010
- November 2010
- October 2010
- September 2010
- August 2010
- July 2010
- June 2010
- May 2010
- April 2010
- March 2010
- February 2010
- January 2010
- December 2009
- November 2009
- October 2009
- September 2009
- August 2009
- July 2009
- June 2009
- May 2009
- April 2009
- March 2009
- February 2009
- January 2009
- December 2008
- November 2008
- October 2008
- September 2008
- August 2008
- July 2008
- June 2008
- May 2008
- April 2008
- March 2008
- February 2008
Keeping trade-ins in house, hearing about ERJ – for – E-Jet “trade up” opportunities at Embraer.
I wonder why Boeing offered a trade-in? Was it because China Eastern couldn’t afford the 777′s outright? Was it because Boeing was prepared to go to any length to secure an order for more 777′s? Was China Eastern reluctant to buy without a sweetener?
Will this happen more & more?
Airbus is taking China Eastern’s 5 A343′s in exchange for their 15 A330 deal. I guess you could apply the same questions to Airbus?
http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2012/apr/30/boeing-trade-in-deal-chinese-airline
True.
As Scott says, it is not unusual for the OEMs to take trade-in airplanes.
But it is not usual to take trade-ins of the competitor’s brands.
“We don’t like Boeing using Russian or Chinese help to produce airplanes–after all, these two countries are developing competitors to Boeing aircraft and it strikes us as pretty silly to help your competitor (why not hire French or German engineers, for Pete’s sake?)”
Regardless of their citizen ship, engineers are engineers and as far as I know Boeing is a global organization playing in a global market.
This is a sad to read more and more of such protectionist comments…
Correct, and I’m sure EADS uses some forign engineers, too.
Notice we did not name India, Japan, Brazil or even Canada in our objections; the Chinese and Russians are developing C919 and MS21, direct competitors to Airbus and Boeing mainline bread-and-butter jets. We think it’s dumb for Airbus and Boeing to help these countries develop the technical proficiency to become competitors.
While I agree with you, Airbus has an A-320 FAL in China, and Canada is building the CS-100-300 which will compete with the B-737-700/-800 (and A-319/-320) on the lower end from 110-150 seats. Still want to use those Canadian engineers you suggested?
CS300 does not compete with 738 and A320. Airbus and Boeing are largely getting out of A319 and 737-700/7 market if you track sales in this market segment carefully.
Engineers are individuals, not drones. If you B or A hires an engineer from Russia or China and keeps him/her employed for 5-10 years, the likelihood of that engineer going to another western company is probably much greater than that of him/her taking the next plane back to work at home.
And if the Chinese or Russians really want engineering talent, they can certainly go headhunting at A or B today. Offer enough money to an engineer for a five-year contract, and he or she will jump at it, regardless of where he/she was born.
Taking older aircraft in trade against the sale of new a/p’s., is as old as the jet age.
The first one Boeing did, as far as I know, was a “PPL” deal, whereby Boeing took
nine 707-138 a/p’s in trade from Qantas, in return for 12 new 707-338 a/p’s.
PPL standing for “Participation in Profit and Loss,” whereby Boeing and Qantas
would share the profits or losses on the joined sales effort of the old a/p’s, on a
25-75% bases, meaning Q. would secure 75% of the profits and 25% of any loss,
after agreeing on an assumed fair market value of the a/p fist.
That formula worked well for Boeing and the customer, until I retired in 1989.
Boeing offered to take Air Canadas A330 and A340 too in the large 777/787 deal, shortly after they came out of bankruptsy. Any further examples?
SQ A-340s, brand new, delivered from Airbus to Boeing.
a) that was one of my concern, hence I moderated my comment and used protectionism, leaving the R word out.
b) It is even more dumb to ignore a market for these reasons. It is better to be with 49% of the profits rather than than with no profit at all. You should also know that what airbus has to loose is not the technical A320 knowledge but rather the supply chain expertise. As you said, the A319 is rather ending.
On the Russian engineer story:
Boeing had Russian engineers working for them over 10 years ago in 2001, when I was there. They were doing design and stress work on the 777. They were all working for Boeing Moscow. The story states, at the very end, that this is where this current bunch of Russian engineers comes from.
Who wants to bet that they were then flown into another city a week or so later, where the officials wouldn’t be so aerospace focused?
Sounds to me like a little bit of politics is going on here. They are talking about employees of a Boeing subsidiary after all.
Having individual engineers from another country working for you is not the issue. The danger comes from having employees that all work for one foreign company in your offices.
That could lead to a coordinated effort to glean as much experience and knowledge for the betterment of said company.
The individual engineers do not typically have that goal of advancing any single company. They are either looking for a new experience, a new place to live for a while or just for a good paying job.
Trade ins:
As I recall, the biggest irony and joke about the brand spanking new A340s story was that the Boeing sales team had to try to sell them. What ever did become of those aircraft?
It is not difficult to sell a good product.
A-340? A good product in the era of the B-777?
The A340s went to EK, still in service.
The A340 is not a desert dweller.
Would be interesting to know what size of lever Boeing
used to push the 777 into the market.
( Or for the recent sales rush of the 777 )
Yes, it is not a desert deweller, but neither is it commanding record sales prices on the used airline market. Many are still with their original airlines as no one wants to buy them, not even FedEx or UPS. I hear 20 year old B-752s and B-763s command higher pricing than 20 year old A-342s and A-343s. But the A-342/3s do seem to be in higher demand than their later sisters, the A-345/6.
Does it matter what size the lever is that Boeing is pulling when the B-777 alone has out sold the A-330/-340 combined?
No, KC the 777 has not outsold the A330/A340 combined. BTW, I’ve noticed that you repeatedly state that the 777 has outsold the A330/A340 combined. Could you please refrain from doing so, until a time in the future where it would be correct to state that, indeed, “the 777 has outsold the A330/A340 combined” (i.e might happen, might never happen).
As of 31st of March, 2012, the total A330/A340 order count stands at 1565 units.
As of 31st of March, 2012, the total order count for the 777 stands at 1367 units.
http://active.boeing.com/commercial/orders/index.cfm?content=displaystandardreport.cfm&pageid=m25062&RequestTimeout=100000